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I Am I Am

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (24 ratings)

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I Am I Am album cover
01
I Am - I Am
3:36
02
The North Star
3:50
03
Hajile
3:50
04
Titus
5:06
05
Louisada
3:38
06
id
2:59
07
The Cross + The Crescent
3:31
08
Othello
4:48
09
Ezequiel
5:19
10
Pagan
8:22
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 44:59

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Disciplined beauty

thirdpol

I downloaded most of this over a year ago and couldn't stop playing the pieces. Remarkable that in a setting which often encourages players to go on talking for ten minutes or more on any given theme, Allen and his crew are determined to be concise and to the point. Wonderful interplay between the three instruments, and highly melodic without being banal or merely mood music. Highly recommended. Try Shine too, also on emusic.

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Further In the Tradition of Sonny Rollins

Harmony3001

This music is very basic in its construction. There's no big bands, huge chords basis, nor is there long melodic improv here. This is basic, and beautiful. While JD does explore Indian (not Native American) and Middle-Eastern melodic ideas, his music is 'thema-centric': he continually restates the theme through the entire piece. While some will feel this music is too simplistic, what JD is trying to do is impress the theme upon you and show how each note is fundamentally linked to the theme. If you like the trio music of Sonny Rollins, Brandford Marsalis, or even John Coltrane; you will find much to love in JD. Recommended for sax trio fans.

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Coffeehunter's right

BFlat

Othello and Ezequiel are being played and replayed on my machine. This man, JD Allen, is one to keep an ear to.

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You are.

coffeehunter

Muscular. Visceral. Melodic. Get it.

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They Say All Music Guide

J.D. Allen is a tenor saxophonist who clearly wears his influences on his sleeve, and is devoted to the sound that made Sonny Rollins and John Coltrane icons in modern jazz. While still developing his own voice on the instrument, Allen exudes a quiet confidence, stream of consciousness ideas, and solid sense of purpose for this recording in a sax-bass-drums trio setting, much like Rollins did in for his legendary Village Vanguard club date of 1957. A program of all originals written by Allen, the music is earthy and cool, heady, sophisticated and tactful, rarely moody, sober, or melancholy for any length. Most like Coltrane is the meditational and loose title cut, while “Hajile” is similarly liberal in the manner of Rollins. “Titus” takes a different tack, as its strident deliberate theme is akin to a theoretical, expansive march, the outstanding “Louisada” uses one note, hip tension and release, while the well swung “Id” sports a concurrent Latin and Asian feel. The hard waltz “Pagan” and out and out bopper “Ezekiel” close in on the classic Blue Note style, with Allen digging in and thrusting the melody forward. “The North Star” showcases Allen’s largest emotional range, and expressing a Middle Eastern facet, “The Cross & The Crescent Sickle” juxtaposes Allen’s Arabian theorem over the arco bass of Gregg August and choppy drumming courtesy of Rudy Royston. Allen’s rhythm mates should be noted, as August has been leading his own groups in Latin and modern mainstream jazz, while Royston is quickly rising as a formidable power percussion source in New York City. Allen himself has seen his star rise steadily in the decade of the 2000s, and this recording shows he’s on the verge of hitting his stride. – Michael G. Nastos

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